A player in middle position opened for 800 and his neighbor in the hijack called. Chris Moneymaker over-called from the big blind and all three of them checked on .
The on the turn was seen for free and the initial raiser checked before action was on him. Moneymaker bet out 1,275 and the initial raiser folded right away. The hijack called.
As the completed the board, Moneymaker checked. The hijack quickly bet 2,000 and Moneymaker called.
The hijack showed and Moneymaker mucked.
"Bad turn," he said as he slid his cards into the muck.
Dan Colman just arrived in the Miranda room, walking up to the late registrants table in the corner to receive his crisp 50,000 in chips. Two other familiar faces, German superstar Ole Schemion and British bracelet winner Liv Boeree, are also seated, though they have been here a bit longer already.
We found Luc Greenwood on the button and staring at a bet of 2,000, just under the size of the pot, from a middle-position opponent. The board read , and Greenwood put in a call after thinking about a minute. On the river, Greenwood snap-called another bet of 4,200.
The middle player tabled for top pair, but Greenwood had and swept up the pot.
Jordan Young was in late position and called a raise of 700 from a player in early position. The blinds also called and the flop came . The action was checked to the preflop raiser who bet 2,500 and Young was the only one to call.
The turn brought the and Young called a bet of 5,000. The river landed the , and again Young called a bet of 5,000. His opponent tabled and Young wasn't able to beat the overpair.
With three players each paying 1,100 on the flop, action got to the turn with Greg Raymer in position. Both players checked to the 2004 Main Event champion, who bet 2,200. One player folded and Larry Lipman called.
The river was the and both players checked. Lipman showed for two pair, but Raymer tabled for a higher two pair to move up to 65,000.
Shots, of course! Over on Table 600 in the Miranda Room, the player in Seat 2 asked who was interested in doing shots. Remarkably enough, several players at the table agreed.
Liv Boeree, though, politely declined.
"You don't owe me an explanation," the instigator said. "No peer pressure."
"Niall!" Boeree shouted to Niall Farrell one table over. "They're doing shots here. You're at the wrong table!"
"Ow, damn!" Farrell exclaimed with a grin that gave away that he's no stranger to doing shots.
"You want one?" the two-seat asked Farrell. But Farrell too declined, saying he didn't want to be the only one on his table doing it. With the likes of Stuart Rutter, Nacho Barbero, and Melanie Weisner at his table, there's always the possibility it might happen later on. The last level of the day is a more common level for a drink than the second, though.
It is level 2 of day 1 and one guy at my table just announced "shots?" and 4 other players said yes.